I have a feeling he was not entrusted with the contact info of many of their family/business contacts. I don't blame him for not writing thank you notes - my guess is he was not allowed to have much knowledge or control of what was going on. He was told to stand onhis mark and that was it. The guy doesn't impress me much but he was a pawn. Pawns don't call any of the shots.

That actually brings up an intersting question. Let's assume Kim owns all the wedding gift according to the divorce decree. If she said to was it Kris? " I have all the gifts and contact information. I will send out the thank you notes and do something appropriate with the gifts" does he sill need to send a thank you? He can't return the gifts they are not his anymore. Or let's say she owns the gifts but said nothing about a thankyou, I think he is still responsible to send thankyous but can be given a pass if we assume the marriage was a sham solely on her part.

MMM, I think if she's got all the gifts and contact information, then he should ask her for the contact info and send out thank-you's anyway. He may not be able to return them, but he should at least acknowledge them.

Logged

If wisdom’s ways you wisely seek,Five things observe with care,To whom you speak,Of whom you speak,And how, and when, and where.Caroline Lake Ingalls

If I were in his shoes, I would thank the people I knew, and could contact. I doubt that they're amicable enough right now that he can simply drop her a line, "Hey, Kim, could you forward me the list of who gave what? Thx!", and I suspect both his legal firm and hers would be advising them against that.

Logged

My cousin's memoir of love and loneliness while raising a child with multiple disabilities will be out on Amazon soon! Know the Night, by Maria Mutch, has been called "full of hope, light, and companionship for surviving the small hours of the night."

What I meant was if you knew someone who without knowing was in a sham marriage.....that means they loved and/or intended to marry someone who was lying to them and married them for another purpose then being married. We should concluded that they will be devastated and that writting the notes might be excruciatingly painful. I believe that you as a friend/family member have an obligation to forgiven an inability to write thank you notes , the same as if part of a couple died on the honeymoon.

What I meant was if you knew someone who without knowing was in a sham marriage.....that means they loved and/or intended to marry someone who was lying to them and married them for another purpose then being married. We should concluded that they will be devastated and that writting the notes might be excruciatingly painful. I believe that you as a friend/family member have an obligation to forgiven an inability to write thank you notes , the same as if part of a couple died on the honeymoon.

I agree. I also think that some of the movers and shakers who attend as guests on the Kardashian side might not want their contact info going to Kris, even if it is for thank you notes. Even people he knows might not want them if she got all the gifts. I would find it very odd if I knew she got to keep the gifts but I got a note from him thanking me for a gift I knew he wasn't able to enjoy.

Now, lets just do the math. They had 450 guests. Divide that, and that averages $222.00 per guest for a gift.

Now I, humble peon, usually give atleast $125. per wedding.

THESE PEOPLE ARE MILLIONAIRES!

There is no way that she "only" received $100,000 in gifts.

I bet she made a cool $500,000 in gifts....easy.

My guess is that she got $100K in actual items--i.e. boxed things off a registry. I bet she made at least $100K in cash gifts as well. I think the whole things is a shame and I wish the Kartrashians would just go away.

Its probably impossible to fully calculate all wedding related gifts. What about the gag gifts people bought for the bachelorette party? The round of super fancy drinks a friend bought when she found out Kim was was engaged? Or the little "oh my gosh I saw this [wedding do-dad] and thought of you!" gifts. I mean I know my humble working class friends have bought me things like a picture frame when I announced my engagement, another friend immediately went out and bought me lotion, a nail file and 2 bottles of polish, another bought me a drink, a couple both DF and I are friends with bought us a huge cake size "cup cake" and a helium balloon that said "congratulations", etc, etc. These are little things, and they are gifts but not gifts, you know? And I'm sure KK was no exception to this type of gift getting.

Its probably impossible to fully calculate all wedding related gifts. What about the gag gifts people bought for the bachelorette party? The round of super fancy drinks a friend bought when she found out Kim was was engaged? Or the little "oh my gosh I saw this [wedding do-dad] and thought of you!" gifts. I mean I know my humble working class friends have bought me things like a picture frame when I announced my engagement, another friend immediately went out and bought me lotion, a nail file and 2 bottles of polish, another bought me a drink, a couple both DF and I are friends with bought us a huge cake size "cup cake" and a helium balloon that said "congratulations", etc, etc. These are little things, and they are gifts but not gifts, you know? And I'm sure KK was no exception to this type of gift getting.

I'm sure that the people who attended this wedding were wealthy enough that they probably weren't particularly concerned about having their gifts returned, or being compensated for the little things that you mention. The only way I'd be upset about not getting my gift back is if I made a financial outlay that was significant to me. If it was not a large enough amount for me to be concerned about, I wouldn't care about getting my gift back in the case of a sham wedding. The whole "sham wedding" deal would color my opinion of the parties involved moreso than not having my gift returned. If the wedding did in fact fail early, I would not really be interested in nitpicking ever dollar that I spent on the happy couple.

Its probably impossible to fully calculate all wedding related gifts. What about the gag gifts people bought for the bachelorette party? The round of super fancy drinks a friend bought when she found out Kim was was engaged? Or the little "oh my gosh I saw this [wedding do-dad] and thought of you!" gifts. I mean I know my humble working class friends have bought me things like a picture frame when I announced my engagement, another friend immediately went out and bought me lotion, a nail file and 2 bottles of polish, another bought me a drink, a couple both DF and I are friends with bought us a huge cake size "cup cake" and a helium balloon that said "congratulations", etc, etc. These are little things, and they are gifts but not gifts, you know? And I'm sure KK was no exception to this type of gift getting.

I'm sure that the people who attended this wedding were wealthy enough that they probably weren't particularly concerned about having their gifts returned, or being compensated for the little things that you mention. The only way I'd be upset about not getting my gift back is if I made a financial outlay that was significant to me. If it was not a large enough amount for me to be concerned about, I wouldn't care about getting my gift back in the case of a sham wedding. The whole "sham wedding" deal would color my opinion of the parties involved moreso than not having my gift returned. If the wedding did in fact fail early, I would not really be interested in nitpicking ever dollar that I spent on the happy couple.

As far as I know Kris Humphries' family is an average middle class family from Minnesota. His aunts, uncles, cousins, old friends, etc are probably a good variety of non-rich. And any who attended would have had to pay a lot to travel and get hotels, event-appropriate attire, etc.

Now I doubt anyone does want small niceties repaid. My point was simply that one can't really ever fully calculate the value of "wedding gifts" because they are varied and often times spread out over the course of an engagement.